Accessibility Tools

Director of Research and Innovation European University Association Lidia Borrell-Damián shares her thoughts on what lies ahead after Horizon 2020 in which she envisions a new kind of impact by linking research innovation and education. This article was first published on Open Access Government on 6 April 2018.

As Europe decides how to best invest in the future of research and innovation it is clear that Horizon 2020’s successor will need more funding. It is also quite certain that its design must be more efficient and simple in its bureaucratic burdens. However what might be less obvious in our journey to improve the next EU Framework Programme is the potential impact that lies in strengthening links between research innovation and education.

At the European University Association we know that universities play an essential role in educating the highly-skilled people who are much needed in all sectors of the economy. They perform ground-breaking research that leads to innovation and increasingly they drive activities such as spin-offs technology transfer and civic engagement. University innovation hubs and spin-off companies for example are important tools in transforming scientific results into the innovation that we need and in renewing our economy. Behind this are research and doctorate programmes generating the latest scientific knowledge. However better links between these kinds of activities and education for example in master’s programmes are needed for Europe to fully capitalise on this talent.

One way to do this in the next Framework Programme is to foster the entrepreneurial spirit of students for instance by leading them through example. In practical terms researchers could be encouraged to further share their project expertise and experience with students through teaching and training activities. This would give the research a double impact: on the one hand it has the potential to translate into innovation on the other it would become a useful learning material.

This could be done through special EU grant agreements allowing researchers for example funded through the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions and the European Research Council to engage in teaching and to include these activities in their time sheets. By putting grantees in contact with students in such a way we would create natural multipliers of scientific excellence and research values and allow researchers to become the inspiring role models that the next generation of researchers clearly needs. A step like this would foster human talent the natural driver of innovation.

While excellent research that produces innovation is the main objective of the Framework Programme we must remember who is in fact conducting the research. Often the people behind the projects are Europe’s doctoral candidates and therefore they cannot be ignored – especially in our quest for new and diverse forms of impact. A simple step in strengthening the link between research innovation and education would be to allow doctoral candidates funded under the programme to have a time extension. The standard three-year duration for doctoral studies is often too short especially if involving interdisciplinary and international activities and teaching. Doctoral candidates could use the extension either to complete their research project or better to create links with industry and business – and to better exploit their research results. In the long-term this would benefit the sustainability of doctoral education as a whole and foster enduring bonds with industry and business.

Last but not least intensifying a multidisciplinarity approach in the next Framework Programme will be paramount. The Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) disciplines alone cannot solve the complex societal challenges our continent faces. We need to embed expertise in social sciences and humanities as well as the arts in projects addressing energy climate change poverty ageing societies migration and extremism.

Tackling the UN Sustainable Development Goals in the next Framework Programme will naturally also require an innovative multidisciplinary approach that encompasses deeper links between research innovation and education. Horizon 2020’s successor must therefore incentivise crossover between and among these disciplines if we really want to produce results that will make a difference in our lives.

Long-term public funding such as that provided by the Framework Programme is crucial in supporting the research that stimulates the innovation we need. However the recipe requires a good link between research innovation and education policies to hit the maximum score in boosting the development of excellent human talent. If Europe wishes to lead innovation globally and see big results at home this kind of strong and ambitious link must be at the top of the agenda.

Original article.

Author

Lidia Borrell-Damián
EUA

Lidia Borrell Damian is EUA Director for Research and Innovation. Among other EU policy priorities, she has contributed to the work of the Helsinki Group on Gender and to the Gender Group of the European Research Area Stakeholders Platform.

Follow EUA